Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 240, Ed. 1 Monday, August 19, 1946 Page: 1 of 4
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41ST. YEAR, NO. 240
MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1946
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Attack on Plane
Rescuers counted seven- dead and
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tention camps at Cyprus, (NEA Radiophoto from Cairo. Egrpt).
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Lakes Strike
MEMPHIS. Tenn. Aug. 19 (U.PJ— legislative branch has done. ,
economy than this which should be
A
ations nommittee, sent Mr. Truman I curtailed.”
and said all major ports were strike- • tion to flood control expenditure
t r
4
In Calcutta
Pardons Considered
10 sei
NMU vice'president.
before President Truman,
MAGEE, Miss., Aug. 10. (UM— A
from any of the windows at the post
Jordan oEcupied positions in
W
Hester and his men went to the
belongs to the entire public."
4
ti
B J. Jackson returning from s
of
speaker, is among the grad-
left Friday night for the trip.
I
N
dnecdd
o
a
VOTE
»
IO
■
Candidates Enter
Final Campaigns
Radio Urges 130
Million to Fight
Nationalists
Legion Will Aid
Veterans on GI
Leave Requests
- Sixty Buildings
Destroyed in
Village of 2,500
50M€04/4660s/246/8
FIVE CENTS PER COPY
Stephens Delivers
Baccalaureate at
TWC, Ft. Worth
Mississippi Posse
Search for Negroes
Following Shooting
2000 Reported
Dead After Riots
marshy
swamp.
Jackson on KGKO
Tonight at 8
. - <
Robert L. Dorsey, post commander
for the American Legion today an-
26 Cabins of Tourist
Court Destroyed
BRITISH TRANSPORT JEWS TO SYPRUS-In Haifa, Palestine, British troops give water and blankets
to illegal Jewish immigrants after the latter were put aboard a British vessel for shipment to de-
ugo-
was
.. 85
. 82
81
. 92
■ ■ 91
03
embers of
st Machine
authorised by the Civilian Produc-
tion Administration.
Judge Penn J. Jackson candi-
date for Congress will speak over
KGKO tonight at 8. it was stated
here today.
Jackson left early this morning
to enter his final week of cam-
NAVY DISCHARGE __
David Leroy Holland, WT3/c, Route
0, Cleburne. with 18 months overseas
- .
S. J. JACKSON RITURNS
FROM TENNESSEE
, )
short trip to Memphis, Tenn., to
see his sister stricken with polio
The Weather
Communists Reported
To Have Over Million
Regular Soldiers
-—-mMITL
MINE FOUND ON CONET ISLAND BEACH_A Coney Island beach'
guard examines a live mine which washed up on the shore of the
famed bathing resort. Police first thought the mine was a "Buoy,"
but Navy experts who said the mine was sowed during the war
for harbor protection, learned its true identity and towed it away
after the detonator cap was removed. (NEA Telephoto).
DETROIT, Aug. 10. u.—Negoti-
ations in the five-day-old Great
Lakes shipping strike were resumed
in New York and Chicago today
while the National Maritime Union
(CIO) sought to tie up all traffic
on the lakes by Friday.
Both sides continued to give out 4
conflicting reports on the effects
of the walkout which began last
Thursday when the NMU called it
members out to enforce demands fot
a 40-hour week and other benefits.
The NMU claimed that about IM
ships were tied up by the strike
hit several times from behind. He
said the last shot was fired after
the C-47 made a forced landing
with its wheels up. Crombie said
he circled the area in an effort
to find a landing field, but finally
was forced down in a corn field.
to get its "team hitched up. If you
are a part of that team this appoint-
ment should claim your attention
and time.” ‘
are in the run-eft for Precinct Com-
missioner No. 2 while W M (Man-
ning) Coward and Roy Wyatt, pre-
sent commissioner are entering the
final stages of their Precinct 1 race.,
Oscar Hewett and Noel Wofford
are running for Constable Precinct
Sunday
1 p.m.....
4 p.m. ...,
6 p.m. .
• p.m,
10 p.m. .1 1
11 p.m.
a
tn Mis-
te ^Md
pending
it was
3 Maximum temperature 104 degrees
in past 24 hours
Minimum temperature 81 degree:
in past 24 hours
Maximum temperature 02 degrees
a year ago today.
Minimum temperature 77 degrees
a year ago today \
Monday
102 2 a.m. , .
. 108' 4 a.m.:.....
100 8 a m. ...
. 03 8 a.m .....
,90010 a.m.
87 12 noon •
I
For 17
Pender
Yugoslavs Blamed
For Inexcusable
J. Pendergast machine, wth
sentences after convictioir
.4
3t
Mr
I
$ m wit Fatres and JaekFyter
are in the run-off for Public Weigh-
ar for Precinct 6.
pires September
struction can be undei
Wcon-
i unless
commander, will render aid to all
eligible veterans.
"TMMN
-I
A --
IMES-REVIEW
HOTO PICTURES— , United Press Leased Wire Service
W 1
Reinforcements Move
Into Palestine as
Underground Active
CHINA REDS APPEAL FOR FULL SCALE CIVIL WAR
union claimed. On the other hand
the Lake Carriers Association, rep-
resentative of all the major shipping
companies, said only 13 of 316 ships
operated by member companies were
tied up.
An independent survey showed
that about 60 vessels were halted by
beneath the cockpit of the ¥
slav planes and that the C-47
make a HWline cutting it M.”
The fire being well outside the
city limits of Cleburne and there
bring no county fire fighting com-
pany no fire. apparatus was on the
scene No buildings were lost.
Highway 20 near Mize reported they
were fired on by Negroes. No one
in the car was reported to have
been hit. r
As the officers approached ths
said. "It has, if any, the remotest
effect-on economy and none on in-
flation.
"There are literally hundreds of
Over Million Strong
The Communists are estimated
to have as many as 1,200,000 reg-
ular soldiers, with 2,000,000 addi-
tional regulars.
A- spokesman for the Commu-
nists said he did not know if the
declaration of war would mean
that Communist leaders at Nan-
king would leave for Yenan.
He said the peace talks had be-
come completely hopeless since
Chiang's statement last week that
the state couldn't survive if there
wers.two governments and two
The Communistic Yenan radio said
1 000 Kuomintang troops were wip-
ed out at Kihsien. which the gov-
ernment seized in October. The
Communist account said Nation-
alists lost 15.000 men in the en-
tire area. Including 5,000 who sur-
rendered.
McKellar, veteran Senate pres- I expenditures having more effect on
ident and chairman of the appropri-
the American Legion through its
service officer will aid veterans in
preparing forms to apply for the
terminal leave pay.
The Legion official also stated
that application forms may be secur-
ed from Faye Burton on the east
l _vet erun Communist troops have
MARGARET COLVIN, 50-year-old operator of an Indianapolis fought their way into Kaifeng and
— •—.— I—■----——-ha---- ■—t‘----• — I are pushing forward along a 100-
mile front, the newspaper Hsin
Min Pao said today.
The newspaper Ta Kung Pao
said that well-trained Natinalist
reinforcemertts, with strong air
support, had joined the fight
against the surging Communists
but admittedly were facing a nu-
merically superior foe. 8
The Kalgan radio broadcast plac-
ed all Communist areas on a war
footing and put into effect full air
raid precautions. •
A
E
streets around th so-called British
fortress in Jerusalem Mobile Brit-
ish troops guarded approaches to
the central post office, which hs
been evacuated after numerous an-
onymous “warnings."
The underground war of nerves
against the British continued today.
Another false telephone warning
that the post office was about to be
blown up sent employes running into
the streets. An hour's search pro-
duced nothing.
Everywhere there was an atmos-
phere of expectancy, but the Jewish
underground organisations were ly-
bound. About 4,000 of its 5,000 limitations.
NMU members were on strike, the J "We have not cnanged our form
of government McKellar declared.
"There are no conditions warrant-
ing the nullification of what the
losis program, members work to-
gether like a team.” Niss Bothwell
Mid “The association is now trying
NANKING, Aug. 19 OJJb—The
Kalgan radio broadcast an appeal
today to 130,000,000 Chinese Com-
munists to mobilise (or full scale
civil war against the National gov-
ergment as Communist troops en-
tered Kaifeng, eapita of Hoan
Province.
The Yenan broadcast asked for
support to “shatter Chiang Kal-
Shek’s offensive."
Open Declaration
It was the first open declara-
tion of war in the 18-year fratri-
cidal conflict of this country, and
the second -maobilizatien order the
Communists ever have issued.
The first order was in 1937
against the Japanese
An estimated 100.000 to 200,000
Grass Fire Destroys 200 Acres
Of Pasture Southwest of Town
.■w *•
. ■ — 4--------------------+
tally incompetent and for whom
such guardians have been appoint-
ed. This class of person interested
in veterans will write for a special
application form.
Third type of application form will
be used for person in service on
September 1, 1946, and discharged
or separated at a later date.
Application must be sworn to
before a notary or other persons
authorized to administer oaths, it
must be mailed on or before Septem-
ber 1. 1047
The local American Legion, in co-
JERUSALEM, Aug. 10. (U.R—Brit-
ish troop reinforcements moved int
Palestine from Trans-Jordan today
as renewed military preparations
were seen in the Haifa port, where
the blast-damaged refugee transport
Empire Reywood was being repair-
ed.
' Arab legionnaires from Trans-
Enemy No. 1.” '
The association is dependent on
four main groups to carry out a bal-
anced program: the medical profes-
sion, the tax-supported official ag-
encies. and the tuberculosis associ-
ation. "The battle against tubercu-
losis." says Willi* 4 Osler. one of
the world's greatest teachers/ of
medicine, is not a doctor’s affair, it
Patterson said an investigation
of the incident was still in. the
prelimnary state, but that the
facts show “this was a wicked, in-
excusable. deliberate attack on a
friendly nation’s plane lost in a
storm. Only by the grace of God
and the expert nets of the pilot
they were not killed."
Stratton quoted Crombie as say-
ing that the C-47 was flying the
usual route from Vienna to Rome
when it ran Into bad weather and
began using instruments. Crombie
said he saw ground as the plane
was approaching Udine. 65 miles
east of Ljubljana, and that two
Yugoslav fighters came through
the clouds, giving hand wags
which he interpreted as a greeting.
(Yugoslavia has protested to the
United States Concerning "viola-
tion" of Yugoslavian territory by
American planes. A formal pro-
test was filed in connection with
the Ljubljana incident, the official
Tanjug News Agency reported.)
Crombie told Stratton that he
suddenly saw fire spurting from
Ho asked southern congressmen
to meet with him in the near future
"for the purpose of takfng such steps
as may be necessary to carry out
the law."
McKellar said that he was “shock-
ed and amazed" to learn of President
Truman's action limiting the ex-
penditures in the current fiscal year
and that of 1948, and of reconver-
sion director John R Steelman's
recent 36 day moratorium on flood
control expenditures.
Mr Truman's order to the Sec-
retary of War, it was understood,
limits flood control expenditures to
$95,000,000 this fiscal year, and to
0110.000.000 in the 1948 fiscal year
and to 3110,000,000 in the 1 948 fiscal
year beginning July 1, 1947.
Under Presidential order, approxi-
mately 0300,000,000 of flood control
and rivers and harbors funds will be
unused at the end of the fiscal year.
June 30, 1947.
Although Steelman's new con-
struction moratorium directive ex-
Rev. Oran Stephens, pastor of the
Main Street Methodist Church, was
in Fort Worth Sunday morning,
where he delivered the baccalaureate
sermon to the summer graduates of
T. W. C. The services were held at
the Polytechnic Methodist Church.
Speaking on “The Inescapable
Bonds," Rev. Mr. Stephens pointed
out that the graduates are inescap-
ably bound to the ptst and to the
future and urged them to recognize
the past and it "Tailures and suc-
cesses, and then look forward to the
Walter Colquitt Stephens, brother
"This is a matter which.involves
the safety and welfare of the Mis-
sissippi River valley," McKellar
CLEBURNE
Published Daily Except Saturday
nursing home, looks on as state authorities unshackle one of the 20
patients found chained to their beds, when police paid a surprise visit
at the institution. Mrs. Colvin is being charged with malicious
mayhem. (International Soundphoto)
L - -.y
h.
murky swamp near here today and
-began closing in on a Negro family
that took refuge there after injuring
four peace officers last night in a
shotgun battle.
Smith County Sheriff Glynn Hes-
ter, Gaston Sullivan, the city marshal
of Mize, Miss., and two deputized
civilians Reza Ainsworth and Glas-
ton Sullivan— were injured in the
shooting.
Hester was reported in critical
condition in a Magee hospital.
Nine state police officers bolstered
local forces.as the Negroes, known
only as the Craft family, fled from
the house at Mise where the shoot-
ing occurred and made tor the
Love and Mrs. Miner. .
Mr Dunlop died at hit Home in
Springfield of a heart attack. Fu-
neral services are being held some
time today in Springfield. He was 5
n former resident of Cleburne and
was employed by the Santa Fe while
living here. . 1
MANKATO, Minn., Aug. 19. cu.p_
Jim Love of Cleburne and Mrs.
J. W: Milner and Brand Prairie
—-- - -- puy.. were called to Springfield Mo., un.
"In a good community tubercu- day by the death Saturday of John
H (Jack) Punlop. father of Mrs.
N 1 * A Revolt Urged Against Curtail-
Resumed in Great A « . f l E_u
Ui Hood Contro Expenditures
the strike.
Negotiations were resumed in
New York between NMU president
Joseph Curran and representative?
of the Bethlehem Tranportation Co.
and in Chicago between the Standard
Oil Co., of Indiana and John Rogan,
chairman of the NMU- negotiating
committee, and Jack Lawrenson,, an
^iswtA, Aug. 13. (U.P—A XT's
Army transport plane inroute from
Vienna to Udine, Italy, was attack-
ed by a fighter plane near Klange-
furt and has not been heard from
since according to an unconfirmed
report which reached Vienna today
BELGRADE. Aug. 19. (.P_The
action of two Yugoslav fighter
planes in forcing down an Am-
erican army transport by gunfire
on Aug 9 was described today by
U. S. Ambassador Richard C. Pat-
terson. Jr., as a “wicked. Inexcus-
able. deliberate attack on a friend-
ly nation's plane lost in a storm"
Patterson said the C-47 made a
forced belly landing in a cornfield
near the Ljubljana Airfield after
the Yugoslav fighters had fired
several bullets Into the plane. One
Turkish passenger waa shot
None of* the eight American
crewmen was hurt, he said, but all
I are being held under strict guard
' In Ljubljana and have been de-
nied contact with the outside
world. Each of the men has a
, separate room in former officers'
7 quartets, he said, and all are be-
i ing fed well.
office.
Three type* of application blanks
will be used. The first one. Is to
be used by the veteran himself who
saw service between September 8
1939 and September 1, 1946 and who
has been honorably discharged or
separated from such service. Origi-
nal or photostat. or certified, copy
of honorable discharge or separation
papers, or certificate in lieu of
(lost) discharge certificate, must
be attached to application
A person discharged from U. S.
Naval service after; September 18.
1944 must also attach NAVPERS
form 553 (certificate of service).
The second group of claimants
will be the next of kin of veterans
who have died since discharge and
before making their own application.
a long letter protesting and chal-
lenging his right to nullify an act
of Congress.
At the same time he sent tele-
grams to congressional represen-
tatives of the seven alluvial valley
states. advising them of hi* opposi-
- /J
-
-
nurse said, “Disease can' as truly
be a threat to life as a robber or
murderer, especially when the dis
ease is a contagious one. Tubercu-
losis is a contagious disease,
“The youth of the nation are the
wealth and reserve and power for
tomorrow. It la the youth that are
the most frequent victims of tuber-
culosis. For them it is Fublic Health
TB Association Will
Meet Tuesday at 7:30
in County Court Room
Community leaders are urged to
attend the meeting of the Johnson
County T. B. Association, Tuesday
evening. 7:30 in the county court-
room
"All public spirited people wish
their community to be a safe place
to live." Miss Bothwell. . county
the । two McDonalds running for the
place. J. E. McDonald, incumbent
of Ellis County is opposed by R. E
'—Deserters
The Chinese Reds also referred
to large numbers of government
troops alleged to have deserted
in a refusal to attack "liberated
areas.”
Field dispatches said the Red
troops smashed through Kaifeng’s
east gate following yesterday’s
declaration of “open civil war" by
the Communist newspaper Eman-
cipation Daily. Hsin Min Pab said
the “fall of Kaifeng appears Im-
minent”’
Communist forces reportedly
attacked the Kaifeng railway sta-
tion on the Lunghai railway, af-
ter entering the city.
learned today.
Since ascending to the Presi- 2
dency, Mr Truman has granted 13
pardons to members of the machine
of which he was once a member.
Seveneothers were pardoned hy the
late President Roosevelt.
The persons pardoned, and those
seeking pardons, have served the
sentenced imposed. . _ .3
Grant of the Presidential pardons
would make it possible for the 17
persns to ask the. state of Mis-
souri for restoration of their civil
rights. If their petitions are approy- i
ed. they, cquld vote and hold pub- '
lie office.
Although the basis for a Presi-
dential pardon, never to made public, 4
it usually takes , into consideration
the individual’s behavior record
after sentence has been served.
The federal inquiry into the Kan-
sas City vot frauds resulted in the
indictment of 278 persons, mostly
precinct captains and judge*. Of that J
number, S3 were convicted. j
ggemmgmnvguume ,, I
Missouri Relative
Of Local Man Dies I
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19. uum—
Seventeen members of che Thomasj
' duty bboard the U. 8. S. Grimes ]
TTy Uniteg Press f AFA 12 was dizchzrzet trerr the:
East Texas: Partly cloudy tonight Naval Separation. Center, Norman
I and Tuesday. * (Mila., on August 5.
Approximately 200 acres of what
was desertbed a* good pasture land
was burned in the vicinity of the
Nolan River Country Club Sunday
afternoon. Starting at about 2 o’clock
in the northeast corner of the
country club property the fire fan-
ned by a strong southerly breeze
swept northward burning the pas-
ture land of four land holders. -
Dr. C. C. Cooke's and L. J. Pipes'
land- was. LusL.. burned, .than L E.
Pennington'* and Ralph Temple's.
Each estimated the loss of about
50 acres of pasturage Fencing was
also, destroyed. Total estimates in
dollars and Cent* were not made ex-
cept that Dr. Cooke .claimed a loss
of about $10 an acre on his winter
pasturage.
Dr. Cooke was quoted as saying.
66 injured today in the wake of I
two freak tornadoes which struck |
during the week-end, leveling a
tourist camp and ripping apart the
village of Wells. 30 mile* southeast
t of here.
The death toll rose to seven last
• night, when Ray Melvin, 53, owner
. of a huge turkey farm near here,
died at a Mankato hospital. Six
"P
posse of Mississippi State Police .
and Sheriff* deputies surrounded. a« side of the courthouse square and
- ’ ■ *
Sen. K. D. McKellar, D.. Tenni, to-
day urged southern senators ana
representatives to revolt again*"
Presidential curtailment of flood
control and rivers and harbor* ex-
penditure* already given congres-
sional approval.
"The fire started from a match
being thrown down from someone
probably lighting a cigarette I saw
the match in the grass.” The fire
was a small one, but not being at-
tended to immediately, rapidly, grew.
A few . golfers, including Lee
Battle, .a trustee of the club, helped
in fightirfg the fire, which getting
out of hand, raged for about two
hours until tractors were able to,
thousand of Melvin"* turkey* had
disappeared in the twister.
The tornadoes, striking within an
hour of each other, swept up auto-
mobiles, roof tops and entire build-
ings, causing an estimated $3,000,000
damage.
At Wells, where 250 persons in a
movie house miraculously escaped
injury, not a single store- on the
main street was able to operate to-
day. St. Casimer’s Catholic Church
held open air masses, and highway
crews with bulldozer equipment
worked to clear away the debris.
Sixty buildings—stores, homes and
offices—were heavily damaged or
destroyed in downtown Well*. a vil-
lage of 2,700 population.
Forty persons still were hospital-
ised last night, and at least five
of them were reported in critical
condition..
The first twister, in which all
seven persons were killed, swept in
from the southwest and struck at
6:52 p. m. (CST) Saturday. It
skimmed the tree tops, then swept
across a highway directly into the
Green Gable tourist camp, three
miles outside of Mankato, where
70 persons were living because of
the housing shortage. The camp'*
26 cabins were destroyed.
paigningbefore the second pri . presidentini VO(
WW—W-------------------j'S! havespardidcnettlons
uuta— “haiEeenathair-de- MadneedaynAueuatTrepert"Gnat
grees on Friday night on the cam- she is "doig splendidly." Jackson
i pus quadrangle. left Friday, night for the trip,
mom
Negro dwelling after white passen- . r
tan of an automobile traveling on This will include guardians or con-
servators for veterans who are men-
ing low. Unimpeachable sources
said the underground organizations,
with the possible exception of Irgun
Zvai Leumi, were avoiding violence
momentarily while Brit ish-Jew ish
negotiations proceed in London
CORRECTION
In Burr's Department Store ad-
vertisement in Sunday'* paper an
error was made wherein the Trav-
Ler record player was qyoted at
a price of $24 35 when the price
should have been $33 50
— fheTime-fteviewgtadtcor=
rect the error made in the advertise-
ment. • <
cumbent and hi* opponent Houston
Walling are carrying on strenuous
vote getting campaign* tor the sher-
iff* position
S W Evans and H Olin Hadley
Political candidates enter their
final week of campaigning before
the second primary election next
Saturday, August 24.
In the Governor's race Beauford
Jester, of Navarro County and
Homer P. Rainey of Travis County
for the office to be vacated by Gov
Coke Stevenson.
Boyce House of Fort Worth and
Allan Shivers of Jefferson County
are seeking the office of Lieutenant
Governor.
In the race for the office of Com-
missioner of Agriculture there are
and densely-thicketed
CALCUTTA, Aug. 10. (U.P — The
death toll in three days of rioting
between Hindu* and Moslem* in the
Calcutta streets was estimated be-
tween 2,000 and 3,000 today. The
frenzy apparently had passed, and
the city moved slowly toward nor-
mal.
’ The British-owned newspapr the
Statesman, which was attacked by
a, a mob early ft the thfee ay rltig,
a published the 2.000-3,000 death esti-
mate. It said th injured number-
ed many thousand. Other sources
estimated 4,000 hurt
Pile* of corpse* still cluttered
the. streets, but mass fighting had
dwindled to sporadic clashes and
fires. British troops, shooting when)
’ necessary, began to get the city
under control yesterday. It will
take several days before complete
calm is enforced, even if no further
major outbreaks occur., '
A government statement empha-
sizd ‘the difficulties involved in
N disposing of hundred* of corpse* left
> In streets, rivers and ponds as fight-
ing spurted through the city. A
stench of death permeated the sun-
___scorcheg.city.
Hospital and emergency feeding
facilities were overtaxed. Uncollected
garbage accumulated, and there was
• a threat of smallpox and cholera.
-—-s
Freak Tornados Kill 7 Injure 66 “=
In Mankato, Minnesota On Sunday
„ nounced that appligationL forms for
GI terminal leave pay hive been
secured by the Legion and are ready
for distribution. He also said that
CLEBURNE. TEXAS.
McDonald of Travis County.
Jesse Qwens of Northwest Texas '
Wilbarger County is running against 1
Tom L. Beauchamp of Smith County I
for the Judge ot Criminal Appeals.
The campaign between Judge Penn .'
J. Jackson and Wingate Lucas of
Grapevine- for the congressional post
to be vacated by Frits G. Lanham
goes into its final stretch as both
candidates set a fast and steady
pace in their bids for votes in the
12th district comprising Tarrant.
Johnson, Hood, Parker and Somer-
veil Countlee
Locally Sheriff Oran Smith, in-
house, however, they were met oy
a withering blast of shotgun fire.
*“*
i .
-
md
b" - ■
• f"Siu-
Survivors include his widow,
Mr* Lula Dunlop, Cleburne; two
daughter*. Mr*. Jim Love, Cleburne,
ant Mrs Hw.—finalIf,
Prairie; and two sons, J. D. and
Bobbie Danlop, Cleburne.
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Brown, Herman. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 240, Ed. 1 Monday, August 19, 1946, newspaper, August 19, 1946; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1423145/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.